Gene/Protein
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Drug
Enzyme
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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Unclear pulmonary infiltrates with eosinophilia, a problem of differential diagnosis. HISTORY AND ADMISSION FINDINGS: A 60-year-old woman was admitted for the diagnosis of pulmonary infiltrates. A year before she had been exposed to tuberculosis when working as a doctor in Manila, the Philippines. Ten days before admission she had spent 10 days in Sao Paulo, Brazil. On admission she complained of
fatigue
, dry cough and nocturnal sweating. Her body temperature was 37.8; C. At auscultation of the chest fine rales were heard with diminished percussion sounds over both lungs. INVESTIGATIONS: The chest radiogram showed bilateral apical infiltrates. Blood count indicated normal white and red cells, but platelets were raised to 606 x 10 9/l. The differential blood count revealed an eosinophilia of 30%, ESR was raised at 91 mm/h and C-reactive protein increased to 103 mg/l. Angiotensin-converting enzyme, IgG, IgA, IgM, IgE, C3 and C4, paraproteins, antinuclear antibodies and double-strand DNA antibodies were all within normal limits. There was no direct or indirect evidence of tuberculosis and no parasites were found in sputum, stool, urine and blood. DIAGNOSIS, TREATMENT AND COURSE: After bronchoscopy with bronchial biopsy had failed to establish a diagnosis, an open lung biopsy with partial lung resection was performed. This revealed histologically an eosinophilic pneumonia with intra-alveolar protein precipitation and multinucleated giant cells, as well as interstitial fibroblast proliferation without demonstrable mincroorganisms. Under cortisone administration there was striking improvement of symptoms within a few days, and C-reactive proteins fell to 3 mg/l, ESR to 25 mm/h and the eosino-philia to 2%. CONCLUSION:
Eosinophilic pneumonia
should be included in the differential diagnosis of unclear pulmonary infiltrations with eosinophilia, once parasitological and malignant diseases, tuberculosis and allergic pulmonary aspergillosis have been excluded.
...
PMID:[Unclear pulmonary infiltrates with eosinophilia, a problem of differential diagnosis] 1275 Oct 17